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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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so mississippi was, mississippi is, is moving on. but yes you are right. there is more and more they should come out and talk about it. so you get a balanced picture. their view of the south may not be the correct one today. it's not just a bunch of rioters throwing bricks. thank you. >> henry, could you talk a little more about the special security details that you had following your initial -- and i would assume -- you are chosen for that. did you know why you were chosen for that? >> yeah, thank you. i was the lead in my battalion from ft. dix new jersey, to go down to oxford. we were not prepared. i had to -- my colonel looked at me and he said, do your best. this was after i asked about a map. armies have maps. they have maps of central europe. they have a map of the park benches and a fire hydrant. we did not have a map. do your best, he said. i looked up and my brother was an enlisted man in the army and he said, whatever you do as a second lieutenant, don't show indecision. just make in order and make a decision and move with it. so i grabbed my dr
so mississippi was, mississippi is, is moving on. but yes you are right. there is more and more they should come out and talk about it. so you get a balanced picture. their view of the south may not be the correct one today. it's not just a bunch of rioters throwing bricks. thank you. >> henry, could you talk a little more about the special security details that you had following your initial -- and i would assume -- you are chosen for that. did you know why you were chosen for that?...
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Jan 9, 2013
01/13
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work in mississippi in the aftermath of the aclu litigation. but a lot of it involved the sheer reclassification of prisoners in getting guards to a different training to address behavioral issues, and so there's extensive plans that have been devised prison by prison where there has been challenges to the use of administered the segregation in these prisons. >> [inaudible] >> well, that access to mental health service is an important part of this piece. and so there's no access to mental health service. there's transition programming which is critically important so the people of been in long-term isolation are not just getting released into the streets. there's a number of different factors that now, in a, when we push for reform would push for these reforms in order to kind of maintain better security. we also are commissioning studies now, there are studies being done about really what is the truth behind the rationale for using segregation. does it truly make the prison safer, or are there other ways to do this using some of the reforms th
work in mississippi in the aftermath of the aclu litigation. but a lot of it involved the sheer reclassification of prisoners in getting guards to a different training to address behavioral issues, and so there's extensive plans that have been devised prison by prison where there has been challenges to the use of administered the segregation in these prisons. >> [inaudible] >> well, that access to mental health service is an important part of this piece. and so there's no access to...
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Jan 8, 2013
01/13
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work in mississippi, kind of the aftermath of the aclu litigation. but a lot of it involved sheer reclassification of prisoners and getting guards to have different training to address behavioral issues but and so extensive plans that have been devised present by present where there's been challenges to the use of administrative segregation in these prisons. .. >> we also are commissioning studies now, there are studies being done about really what is the truth behind the rationale for using administrative segregation. does it truly make the prison safer, or are there ways to do this using some of the reforms that, you know, were enacted in mississippi. so we're studying what the impact has been in mississippi for these -- >> [inaudible] >> i just listed some of them. reclassify classification, access to mental health services, transition services so that you've got a whole plan before you get released out onto the street and that kind of thing. >> excuse me, i was just curious, the black population in these prisons and the abuse that is happening wi
work in mississippi, kind of the aftermath of the aclu litigation. but a lot of it involved sheer reclassification of prisoners and getting guards to have different training to address behavioral issues but and so extensive plans that have been devised present by present where there's been challenges to the use of administrative segregation in these prisons. .. >> we also are commissioning studies now, there are studies being done about really what is the truth behind the rationale for...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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and then he went over to mississippi. he was the model for inspector erskine, and the long-running fbi series. he was a no-nonsense copper. and like most fbi agents, they don't go in there with an envisioned to do political work, which means listening to your phones and planning propaganda and going around calling into people's private lives. they doing to solve cases. so you have a delicious or a painful conflict running in this era. you have the most spectacular political misuse of the fbi going on at the same time the fbi is trying to solve new kinds of crime and confronting the plan down in the south at the time when they were almost at will committing to these crimes all through this 63-65 period. so in the same institution, you have people who are becoming new kinds of heroes and old kind of corruption's inside the fbi. c-span: tell us more -- or give us kind of a profile on martin luther king. how tall was he? how old was he during this period? was he married? did he have children? where did he go to school? all th
and then he went over to mississippi. he was the model for inspector erskine, and the long-running fbi series. he was a no-nonsense copper. and like most fbi agents, they don't go in there with an envisioned to do political work, which means listening to your phones and planning propaganda and going around calling into people's private lives. they doing to solve cases. so you have a delicious or a painful conflict running in this era. you have the most spectacular political misuse of the fbi...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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again, utilizing the mississippi river, the tool, the thing that essentially by letting the mississippi completely change the hydrology and the building of the dell that is effectively cause the precipitous drop of wetlands that we experienced in 1930, we get it from sea level rise, and the plan put together recognizes that, went we believe within the next 50 years we can in coast call louisiana, and fort most part throughout the gulf region, develop a plan and way to create a long term sustainable ecosystem and a sustainable coast that provides resources to the nation. >> this is -- i like my job so this is where i pass the microphone on fracking. [laughter] not really. i already stated we have to make hard decisions on what we can do and what -- especially what the mississippi river can bring to us, both good and bad, and think about the future and take care of the people in some way, some farmers have suggested that shrimpers in the gulf of mexico should just find another way to make their living. that doesn't sit very well with me or probably -- >> no, not at all. >> i didn't think
again, utilizing the mississippi river, the tool, the thing that essentially by letting the mississippi completely change the hydrology and the building of the dell that is effectively cause the precipitous drop of wetlands that we experienced in 1930, we get it from sea level rise, and the plan put together recognizes that, went we believe within the next 50 years we can in coast call louisiana, and fort most part throughout the gulf region, develop a plan and way to create a long term...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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. >> guest: if i was going to play for democracia would have done it in mississippi and alabama. i didn't have to go 10,000 miles to fight for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going down there because you talk about -- >> guest: i came very close and in the run-up to the mississippi summer project in 1964 i went to new orleans. i met with bob moses and other people there. i thought very seriously and probably if it hadn't been for the financing. they wanted people to bring their own money to bail themselves out and other things. i worked my way through school. i needed a job in order to go finish college. >> host: talk about that period. you mentioned sncc and then there was dr. king's organization, the clc. what were their respective missions? what was the overall mission of the movement? was it to get a quality was the big word. was it to get voting rights and civil rights and what else did they want and how were their approach is different from each other? >> guest: i think both thought in terms of her freedom struggle. i think in some ways we mislead ourselves whe
. >> guest: if i was going to play for democracia would have done it in mississippi and alabama. i didn't have to go 10,000 miles to fight for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going down there because you talk about -- >> guest: i came very close and in the run-up to the mississippi summer project in 1964 i went to new orleans. i met with bob moses and other people there. i thought very seriously and probably if it hadn't been for the financing. they wanted people...
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Jan 1, 2013
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shipping on the mississippi river has been reduced and may stop in areas where drought has left water levels too low for safe passage. the american waterways operators and the waterways council estimate that $7 billion worth of commodities are supposed to ship on the mississippi in december and january alone. so an interruption would be a considerable economic effect. the u.s. army corps of engineers has been a $10 million project to prevent the shutdown. the other option would be to release water from the missouri river, but that would just be drawing down water supplies in up-river states that are already suffering from drought themselves, like montana and nebraska and north dakota. water is also essential for power generation. according to the united states geological survey, power plants account for nearly half of the daily water withdrawn in the u.s. drought and heat go hand in hand to push power plant towards shutdown. a 2008 drought put several power plants in the southeast within days or weeks of shutting down. texas, california, and the midwest now face a similar challenge wi
shipping on the mississippi river has been reduced and may stop in areas where drought has left water levels too low for safe passage. the american waterways operators and the waterways council estimate that $7 billion worth of commodities are supposed to ship on the mississippi in december and january alone. so an interruption would be a considerable economic effect. the u.s. army corps of engineers has been a $10 million project to prevent the shutdown. the other option would be to release...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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my brother a few weeks before he was assassinated got a chance to travel with him to mississippi because at that time daddy was looking to do a campaign and was doing a little recruiting in the south. so he got to spend that time which him doing the work that he did. so it was very traumatic for all of us in this way because i remember i a bad walk into his arms, she would take me out and say we are going to pay the kissing game. i'm happy daddy's home and he said okay where is -- she called them shorter spots. where is mom's sugar spots. where's martin, where's dexter to date i remember my spot being on the forehead. my mother seems to remember it being on the cheek. but i did the game, okay? so i remember the forehead. [laughter] how did your mother's life changed? >> get changed drastically. my mother worked side by side with my father's movement and in fact before she met daddy she prepares for that when they met and she had to wrestle but her real sense of mission to want to change the condition that we had to live under and daddy did, too said she decided to surrender and accept th
my brother a few weeks before he was assassinated got a chance to travel with him to mississippi because at that time daddy was looking to do a campaign and was doing a little recruiting in the south. so he got to spend that time which him doing the work that he did. so it was very traumatic for all of us in this way because i remember i a bad walk into his arms, she would take me out and say we are going to pay the kissing game. i'm happy daddy's home and he said okay where is -- she called...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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finally he went back over to the lexicon of mississippi. but at the time he was asked to work for the atlanta constitution. you never get back to mississippi, but he stayed. that is how he first got here. and he was given a crash course in how so loaded should a rifle. the last week he was in the army to so they could get rid of him. so -- but he would get involved in the most exciting and dangerous events in the community. and at that time there was practically no legitimacy in the georgia political system. it was shot through with absolute corruption. it was when most of georgia was so-called wet. so-called dry. you could not buy liquor in most of the counties, but every county had plentiful liquor supplies. the sheriff and of his deputies and so forth supported and protected the liquor dealers. we had that in my county as well. jack will find out about these ongoing crimes as well as prostitution and other things like bribery. he would investigate and find out a few people that would give him information, and he would certify that the in
finally he went back over to the lexicon of mississippi. but at the time he was asked to work for the atlanta constitution. you never get back to mississippi, but he stayed. that is how he first got here. and he was given a crash course in how so loaded should a rifle. the last week he was in the army to so they could get rid of him. so -- but he would get involved in the most exciting and dangerous events in the community. and at that time there was practically no legitimacy in the georgia...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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in the run up to the mississippi project i went to new orleans and other people there and fought seriously probably if not for the financing to bring there own money to bail themselves out, i worked my way through school. i needed a job to finish college. >> host: talk about that. you mentioned snic and dr. king organization was the overall mission? the voting rights? double rights? how was the approach different? >> both started with freedom. in some ways we mislead ourselves with the civil-rights movement. if that was the goal of 1965 the agenda was achieved. 64, the active 65, if that was the goal, margin is 13 could retire and go to of college to be that campus minister in carmichael said i could achieve my goal because all of us saw the goal as much more radical. economic change, empower the black community or the black power movement, using the rights that were gained to bring about concrete we saw in 1965 as the beginning now we have basic human rights but what will you do? now the community is 100 years behind you cannot say suddenly you will catch up. there has to be a movement. w
in the run up to the mississippi project i went to new orleans and other people there and fought seriously probably if not for the financing to bring there own money to bail themselves out, i worked my way through school. i needed a job to finish college. >> host: talk about that. you mentioned snic and dr. king organization was the overall mission? the voting rights? double rights? how was the approach different? >> both started with freedom. in some ways we mislead ourselves with...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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in 1964 in mississippi but bbc reporter that was the first one to suggest the story is that these civil rights workers were in hiding and the students were doing this just to get publicity and the abc reporter paul good humana associate with jack nelson, these were some good guys knew that we were not a problem so we love them and we felt that through them we could get our story told. i think that is still a problem with the press since then this all of this time analyzing the players, the democrats and republicans and nobody is talking about the issues. there was a danger in the civil rights movement also. and jack wasn't one of those the was trying to find the popularity, who was winning the popularity contest. was black power going to defeat martin luther king? he wouldn't write a story like that. he understood what the problems were in the south and he bored in on them. .. >> i have the to observe when this panel started in was barbara then president carter then dr. young is on the sheer politeness that i am still scheerer. [laughter] i sort of feel like the rest of the sandy koufax
in 1964 in mississippi but bbc reporter that was the first one to suggest the story is that these civil rights workers were in hiding and the students were doing this just to get publicity and the abc reporter paul good humana associate with jack nelson, these were some good guys knew that we were not a problem so we love them and we felt that through them we could get our story told. i think that is still a problem with the press since then this all of this time analyzing the players, the...
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Jan 28, 2013
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to introduce iranian styled rural health care delivery into medically underserved parts of the mississippi delta. the islamic republic is also greatly expanded educational opportunities with letter series and basically eliminating gender disparity in educational access. one facet of progress that remained almost completely unappreciated in the last is the way for access to higher education is altering the status of iranian women. while the islamic republic places restrictions on women, that westerners would consider unacceptable in their own societies. the majority of university students are now female. the majority of students in the best universities are now female. the majority of medical students in iran are now female and women's presence is increasingly felt across an array of academic and professional discipline. now notwithstanding these comic republic staying power, foreign policy pundits here who in many cases have no direct connection to on the ground reality in siberian and a cadre of so-called iran thanks very common many of whom are ex-features serving in american history in
to introduce iranian styled rural health care delivery into medically underserved parts of the mississippi delta. the islamic republic is also greatly expanded educational opportunities with letter series and basically eliminating gender disparity in educational access. one facet of progress that remained almost completely unappreciated in the last is the way for access to higher education is altering the status of iranian women. while the islamic republic places restrictions on women, that...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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there were floods on the mississippi river in 1993. they moved towns out of the floodplain, but now they are building in the floodplain again, and that just doesn't make sense. the state of texas has been very proactive in claiming state waters after what was land has become open water after several hurricanes. we need to protect the people that are there. we need to provide alternatives for them if it looks like their homes are going to be underwater. the lab where i work is outside of any levy system, and the water level gets higher and higher with every hurricane that we have had, and we all know that we're going to have more, and so we need to think into the future and not 30 years because we just have to take care of the place where people want to live and provide the safety for them at the same time. >> any other comments? i'll go to the next question. marcia, you can lead off if that's okay. >> yeah. >> would you comment on the progress in implementing the post-bp coast restoration plan? money flowing for the projects? instituti
there were floods on the mississippi river in 1993. they moved towns out of the floodplain, but now they are building in the floodplain again, and that just doesn't make sense. the state of texas has been very proactive in claiming state waters after what was land has become open water after several hurricanes. we need to protect the people that are there. we need to provide alternatives for them if it looks like their homes are going to be underwater. the lab where i work is outside of any...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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. >> guest: if i was going to fight for democracy and would have done it in mississippi and alabama. i wouldn't trigger 10,000 miles to vote for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going down there? >> guest: i come very close in the project of 1964i went to new orleans and i met with bob moses and other people there and i fought very seriously. and probably if it hadn't been for the financing that they wanted people to bring their own money to bear themselves out and other things -- i worked my way through school, so i needed a job in order to go to finish college. >> host: talk about the period you mentioned sncc then there was dr. king's organization, would sclc. what was the overall mission of the movement? was a to get equal the is a big word or to get voting rights, civil rights, what else did they want and how were their approach is different from each other? >> guest: both of them thought in terms of the breeding rating and we mislead ourselves when we hear this term civil rights movement because if that had been the goal from 1965 the civil rights agenda had been ac
. >> guest: if i was going to fight for democracy and would have done it in mississippi and alabama. i wouldn't trigger 10,000 miles to vote for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going down there? >> guest: i come very close in the project of 1964i went to new orleans and i met with bob moses and other people there and i fought very seriously. and probably if it hadn't been for the financing that they wanted people to bring their own money to bear themselves out and...
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Jan 7, 2013
01/13
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now it's become a big thing in mississippi. the "new york times" did a series on the commissioner's work in mississippi in the aftermath of the litigation, but a lot involves sheer reclassification of prisoners and getting guards to have different training to address behavioral issues. there's extensive plans devised prison by prison where there's been challenges to the use of administrative segregation in the programs. >> [inaudible] >> oh -- >> [inaudible] >> well, they access mental health services is a big important part of the piece, and so there's active mental health services, transition programs which is critically important to those in long term isolation, just getting released into the street. there's a number of factors that now, you know, when we push for reforms, we push for the reforms in order to kind of maintain better security, and we also are commissioning studies now, there are studies done about really what is the truth behind the rationale for using administrative segregation. does it truly make the prison
now it's become a big thing in mississippi. the "new york times" did a series on the commissioner's work in mississippi in the aftermath of the litigation, but a lot involves sheer reclassification of prisoners and getting guards to have different training to address behavioral issues. there's extensive plans devised prison by prison where there's been challenges to the use of administrative segregation in the programs. >> [inaudible] >> oh -- >> [inaudible] >>...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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. >> guest: if i was going to fight for democracy, i would've done it in mississippi and alabama. i didn't have to get 10,000 miles to fight for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going there? >> guest: i came very close in the run-up to the project of 1964. i went to new orleans. i met with chavez is another people there. i thought very seriously. probably if it hadn't been for the financing of that, but they wanted to bring their own money to bury themselves out and i needed to work my way through school. an easy job to finish college. >> host: you mentioned it. then there was dr. king's organization sclc. what were their respective missions? was the overall mission of the move? was it to get equality? got a nice, civil rights, what else do they want? >> guest: both of them that in turn by the freedom's journal. sometimes the ice lead ourselves when we use the term civil rights movement. in 1965 the civil rights agenda had been achieved. the civil rights act of 1964 from the voting rights act of 1965. so rather than the gold. martin luther king would've said that going
. >> guest: if i was going to fight for democracy, i would've done it in mississippi and alabama. i didn't have to get 10,000 miles to fight for democracy. >> host: did you ever think about going there? >> guest: i came very close in the run-up to the project of 1964. i went to new orleans. i met with chavez is another people there. i thought very seriously. probably if it hadn't been for the financing of that, but they wanted to bring their own money to bury themselves out...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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a woman in southern mississippi got 84 months in federal prison without parole for putting clean dirt on her own land. >> host: senator, when you talk to your colleagues about these incidents, what do you hear? >> guest: some are horrified. about eight of them, who signed on and cosponsored my bill to try to fix it, the other 92 i'm not sure what they're thinking about. but when you tell the american people how the government's harassing, abusing and even imprisoning people for selling raw milk, you can go to an amish farmer, some of these amish farmers have been arrested and threatened with jail because they're selling mil to their neighbors -- milk to their neighbors. >> host: senator paul, will you be taking these issues nationwide? >> guest: we're going to be talking about it everywhere anybody will listen because we think government has gotten out of control, government's run amok, and government's become a bully, and someone's got to stand up to a bully. >> host: november 2012, postelection, what did the 2012 elections clarify for you? >> guest: boy, that we as republicans need
a woman in southern mississippi got 84 months in federal prison without parole for putting clean dirt on her own land. >> host: senator, when you talk to your colleagues about these incidents, what do you hear? >> guest: some are horrified. about eight of them, who signed on and cosponsored my bill to try to fix it, the other 92 i'm not sure what they're thinking about. but when you tell the american people how the government's harassing, abusing and even imprisoning people for...
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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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my wife and i took our first family vacation to galena illinois which is a cozy mississippi river town where on the main strip they there, we discovered a rare book shop. in that rare shop i found a nondescript container full of old newspapers. i picked one up and started reading it and with the april 21, 1865 "new york times." is reading about abraham lincoln and the reward for the capture of the conspirator. that moment triggered in me an intense passion and enthusiasm for history that i seriously had never had. so for the next five years, it became this journey of meticulous kind of collecting of newspapers because i am from the midwest. i don't have convenient access to the wonderful archives on the east coast. i don't have access to a lot of the original found in the libraries and institutions across the country and so i made it a point to try to collect these because much like any other historical collectible they are available for purchase so if any of you have ever seen american pickers on the history channel i would say it's much like that. i would equate myself to a american
my wife and i took our first family vacation to galena illinois which is a cozy mississippi river town where on the main strip they there, we discovered a rare book shop. in that rare shop i found a nondescript container full of old newspapers. i picked one up and started reading it and with the april 21, 1865 "new york times." is reading about abraham lincoln and the reward for the capture of the conspirator. that moment triggered in me an intense passion and enthusiasm for history...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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so, states like mississippi, states like georgia and texas and florida and southern california and arizona, north carolina, are all being transformed in the post world war ii period by this historic shift in population and political influence. just think about it. this real -- this period from 1964 to 2008 could be thought of as kind of the period of the sun belt dominance in american presidential history. you think about every president elected from 1964 to 2008 comes from a state of the sun belt, lyndon johnson, texas. richmond nixon, california. gerald ford, was not elected. so he doesn't count. he was from michigan. jimmy carter from georgia. ronald reagan from california. the first george bush from texas via connecticut. bill clinton from arkansas and the second bush from texas. so 2008 in some ways watershed election. ends the 40-year period of sun belt dominance. and there were issues that were critical in the politics that developed, that came out of the sun belt. they tended to have a conservative cast to them. tended to be oriented around issues of strong national defense, of an
so, states like mississippi, states like georgia and texas and florida and southern california and arizona, north carolina, are all being transformed in the post world war ii period by this historic shift in population and political influence. just think about it. this real -- this period from 1964 to 2008 could be thought of as kind of the period of the sun belt dominance in american presidential history. you think about every president elected from 1964 to 2008 comes from a state of the sun...
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Jan 4, 2013
01/13
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we have seen that in louisiana and mississippi. we are still in mississippi, we're still working with the state to provide assistance to homeowners that are still rehabilitating their home. so we cannot wait really any longer to start -- >> is it fair to say a delayed recovery is a failed recovery speak with a delayed recovery is a failed recovery. recovery that doesn't allow for communities to plan for the range of means, understanding that it may take five to 10 years to recover, we would also say it is failed. >> administrator, taking off from the secretary's comments about the regional economy within the complex -- transportation is a critical element, is it not, if getting people to work, getting a workforce to their job, being able to great productivity, being able to drive a better bottom line, being able to move an economy? i think sometimes we think maybe another part of the country, transportation and particularly transit, in some types of luxury. but isn't it a necessity to economic success? >> it absolutely is, mr. chai
we have seen that in louisiana and mississippi. we are still in mississippi, we're still working with the state to provide assistance to homeowners that are still rehabilitating their home. so we cannot wait really any longer to start -- >> is it fair to say a delayed recovery is a failed recovery speak with a delayed recovery is a failed recovery. recovery that doesn't allow for communities to plan for the range of means, understanding that it may take five to 10 years to recover, we...
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Jan 7, 2013
01/13
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fbi case called operation founder bellmon run by an agent named dennis aiken who was originally from mississippi and he had this investigation that resulted in the conviction. >> the city will never get people to convict him. he had 67% of the voters thinking that he had done a good job even though they got he was guilty and when but he was sentenced in jail, they talked about how she was to people, dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. what he was convicted of is racketeering conspiracy but not actually being physically involved in any of the underlining acts. and he kind of frame it. he became a boss that was able to stay directly out of the line but he knew everything that was going on. she was the kind of guy that said how many rolls of toilet paper there were in the city hall. but he really didn't. so that was the defense but he didn't play out with the journey and he went to prison and relinquished his famous to pay, what he called his dead squirrel. he did his time and went out on talk radio to lead providence has changed a lot to be more like a queen to uncle you have a round of holidays but most of
fbi case called operation founder bellmon run by an agent named dennis aiken who was originally from mississippi and he had this investigation that resulted in the conviction. >> the city will never get people to convict him. he had 67% of the voters thinking that he had done a good job even though they got he was guilty and when but he was sentenced in jail, they talked about how she was to people, dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. what he was convicted of is racketeering conspiracy but not...
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Jan 6, 2013
01/13
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it was run by an sp agent named dennis akin who is originally from mississippi. he led this investigation that ultimately resulted in buddy's conviction. after two months trial, in a city where people said he will never get people to convict buddy, in a city where of buddy went to prison with 67% of voters still thinking it done a good job even though he thought -- they thought it was guilty, when buddy was sentenced sent by the judge, the judge talked about how he was dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. buddy and his own way said well, privately or friendly, how come i didn't get to paychecks. what buddy was convicted of as racketeering conspiracy, knowing about it but not actually being physically involved in the underlying act. buddy kind of framed it as, what did i do? i'm convicted of being the mayor. some of the jurors said otherwise. he was a guy who knew how to keep himself insulated kind of like a mob boss and that he once prosecuted ironically, and that he was able to stay out of the direct line but he knew everything that was going on. he was the kind of guy one
it was run by an sp agent named dennis akin who is originally from mississippi. he led this investigation that ultimately resulted in buddy's conviction. after two months trial, in a city where people said he will never get people to convict buddy, in a city where of buddy went to prison with 67% of voters still thinking it done a good job even though he thought -- they thought it was guilty, when buddy was sentenced sent by the judge, the judge talked about how he was dr. jekyll and mr. hyde....
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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they loved, and sent hundreds if not thousands of miles away to the booming cotton south, alabama, mississippi, louisiana. this book tries to tell the story out that experience for those individuals. what i was able to do, and what is really kind of fun, i think, about the book is readers can go on a journey with eric crow, studying at the hotel where he stayed in richmond, where he woke up that morning, picked up richmond newspapers and was astonished to see advertised there in the upper corner, people for sale. it was something he had never experienced before. richmond was the first southern city he visited. >> host: is that what got him to go to the walk to selma. >> guest: he was prime for that. when he was in new york city he bought a copy of harriet beecher stowe's uncle tom's cabin that had just been released in 1852, and he read the novel and was harrowed by its contents. its horrified him, this story of american slavery, and he was particularly attracted to the slave trade. the commercial aspect of slavery. the selling of humans, one to another. and he was determined when he got a sou
they loved, and sent hundreds if not thousands of miles away to the booming cotton south, alabama, mississippi, louisiana. this book tries to tell the story out that experience for those individuals. what i was able to do, and what is really kind of fun, i think, about the book is readers can go on a journey with eric crow, studying at the hotel where he stayed in richmond, where he woke up that morning, picked up richmond newspapers and was astonished to see advertised there in the upper...
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Jan 13, 2013
01/13
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he had become addicted to cigars when is a cub reporter on the mississippi. of income he contributed his own clouds to the roiling steam. twain bought the long disgusting licorice flavored robes by the bucket full by the barrel for $4, including the bigger. for his guests, he brought them in boxes of 200. he awoke to a three times a night to smoke pretty healthy cigar boys in there, took a few a rogue waves and scattered the favor with the long sweep of his arms. twain had acquired a taste for steam bath in virginia city. and while laboring under bronchitis industries cold of the recently discovered mineral waters, eight miles northwest on the geiger cream, the road between virginia city and steamboat springs, a distance of seven miles. over the first of a long line of nine beautiful columns, there was a house debating. twain likened the jets of hot white steam emitted from fishers in the earth to a steamboats estate tax. they made a boiling, surging noise exactly as a steamboat it. he enjoyed racing eggs in his handkerchief and dipping them in this brings wi
he had become addicted to cigars when is a cub reporter on the mississippi. of income he contributed his own clouds to the roiling steam. twain bought the long disgusting licorice flavored robes by the bucket full by the barrel for $4, including the bigger. for his guests, he brought them in boxes of 200. he awoke to a three times a night to smoke pretty healthy cigar boys in there, took a few a rogue waves and scattered the favor with the long sweep of his arms. twain had acquired a taste for...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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one sky cynthiana pollutions claimed their majesty and the mississippi worked their way to the sea. think the work of our hands we been stealing two bridges, finishing one more report for the boss on time, stitching another wonder uniform. the first brushstroke of a portrait for the last four and the freedom tower jutting into the sky that yields to a resilient. one sky toward which we sometimes lift our eyes tired from work, sunday's cnet the web they are of our lives. some days giving thanks for a love that loves you back. sometimes praising another who knew how to give order for giving a father couldn't give what he wanted. we had home through the glass of rain per week of snow for the palm brush the dust, but always, always home, always under one sky, our sky and always 1,000,002nd senate term tapping on every rooftop in every window of one country, all of this facing the stars, hope a new constellation, waiting for us to not do, waiting for us to name it together. [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen, it is now my privilege to introduce reverend dr. luis deleon to deliver the ben
one sky cynthiana pollutions claimed their majesty and the mississippi worked their way to the sea. think the work of our hands we been stealing two bridges, finishing one more report for the boss on time, stitching another wonder uniform. the first brushstroke of a portrait for the last four and the freedom tower jutting into the sky that yields to a resilient. one sky toward which we sometimes lift our eyes tired from work, sunday's cnet the web they are of our lives. some days giving thanks...
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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those who held slaves would've had 16 years to figure out of it, but the ordinance would've included mississippi and alabama and think of those two places being without slaves failed to pass in the car, congress with just one delegate from new jersey missed the boat to two elements. jefferson himself wrote that the fate of millions on board had been determined by the absence of this one man and joyce appleby, the great historian commented, saying up to the senate today before limitation on slavery had failed, jefferson backed away from attacking the institution to do something about it increased. the other benchmark that i would like to point out is the louisiana purchase. there is a great opening of the west, the empire for liberty, but would require territory, there is a great debate in congress. should we have slavery there? congress came close to being in it and then pass restrictions that so outraged slaveholders who are already there but they threatened secession, to call in the polling backend. people said if you don't allow slavery, our lives will depreciate in value 50% and as all this
those who held slaves would've had 16 years to figure out of it, but the ordinance would've included mississippi and alabama and think of those two places being without slaves failed to pass in the car, congress with just one delegate from new jersey missed the boat to two elements. jefferson himself wrote that the fate of millions on board had been determined by the absence of this one man and joyce appleby, the great historian commented, saying up to the senate today before limitation on...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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and no one put the stakes more bluntly than the rich mississippi planter, richard thompson archer. it is time, archer said, for all good southerners to stand -- his words -- united in defense of the god-given right to own the african. end quote. the official secession documents just state the same sent independent more polite legal language. now, eight other slave states, who had closer ties with the union, remained within the union, and those are the states colored on the map in front of you in gray and light blue. but four of those states, the ones in gray, arkansas, tennessee, virginia, and north carolina, threatened to follow the states of the lower south out the door, unless the newly elected president explicitly abandoned the platform on which he had just been elected. lincoln, they declared, must guarantee that slavery could in the future expand into all or part of the federal territories, and by the way, not only those territories currently held, but also territories yet to be acquired. and that demand was made with an eye on eventually acquiring cuba, parts of central amer
and no one put the stakes more bluntly than the rich mississippi planter, richard thompson archer. it is time, archer said, for all good southerners to stand -- his words -- united in defense of the god-given right to own the african. end quote. the official secession documents just state the same sent independent more polite legal language. now, eight other slave states, who had closer ties with the union, remained within the union, and those are the states colored on the map in front of you...
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Jan 7, 2013
01/13
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it was led by an fbi agent named dennis aitken who was originally from mississippi. he led this investigation and ultimately resulted in buddies conviction. after an epic 2-month trial and a city where people said you will never get people to convict buddy cianci, a city where he went to prison with 67 percent of the voters still thinking he had done a good job in the value is guilty. and when he was sentenced by the judge, the judge talked about how he was really two people, dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. and buddy, in his own way, said, well, you know, privately to a friend later, how come i didn't get to f paychecks. well, convicted of racketeering conspiracy, being kind of in knowing about it but not actually being physically involved in the underlying acts. and buddy kind of friend it as what did i do? was convicted of being the mayor some of the jurors a spoke to felt otherwise, that he was a guy who knew how to keep himself insulated, kind of like a mob boss that he had once prosecuted, ironically. anti was able to stay out of the direct line, but he knew everything
it was led by an fbi agent named dennis aitken who was originally from mississippi. he led this investigation and ultimately resulted in buddies conviction. after an epic 2-month trial and a city where people said you will never get people to convict buddy cianci, a city where he went to prison with 67 percent of the voters still thinking he had done a good job in the value is guilty. and when he was sentenced by the judge, the judge talked about how he was really two people, dr. jekyll and mr....
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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those of you wondering about me, my mom's next american and i was born in mississippi. so there it is. answers on the question, what exactly am i? confused the filipino or hawaiian. nonetheless, first thing i want to say. city of las cruces, new mexico and my friend and el paso, texas, want to tell your cities are safe and open for business. mayor salinas is talking about, we hear media reports saying otherwise. but that's not true. our friend, neighbor or in juarez, mexico has been able to reduce kind by 50% in 2012.
those of you wondering about me, my mom's next american and i was born in mississippi. so there it is. answers on the question, what exactly am i? confused the filipino or hawaiian. nonetheless, first thing i want to say. city of las cruces, new mexico and my friend and el paso, texas, want to tell your cities are safe and open for business. mayor salinas is talking about, we hear media reports saying otherwise. but that's not true. our friend, neighbor or in juarez, mexico has been able to...
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Jan 3, 2013
01/13
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wicker of mississippi. the vice president: please raise your right hand. the vice president: please raise your right hand. do you solemnly swear that you will support and defend the constitution of the united states against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that you bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that you take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that you will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which you are about to enter, so help you god? the group: i do. the vice president: congratulations, senators. [applause] mr. reid: mr. president? the vice president: the majority leader. mr. reid: i note the absence of a quorum and ask the clerk to call the roll. the vice president: the absence of a quorum having been suggested, the clerk will call the roll. quorum call: the vice president: a quorum is present. the majority leader. mr. reid: can we have order, please. the vice president: may we have order in the senate. the majority le
wicker of mississippi. the vice president: please raise your right hand. the vice president: please raise your right hand. do you solemnly swear that you will support and defend the constitution of the united states against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that you bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that you take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that you will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which you are about...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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to experience the gift of traveling along the banks of the mighty mississippi through iowa and south dakota and rivers where lewis and clark march enmeshed with the dream of our first secretary of state, thomas jefferson that would advance into the last to experience a journey that took me to alabama where he stood silently for a much talked to king appreciative stream and tipped my fingers into the top of birmingham where water flows over the name of those murdered steve bullock that are just registering to vote to see the latter chicle uncovers the dark or sparing justice maypole down like waters and righteousness at the mighty stream. i drove of course the hoover dam and i wondered if they did at what america can accomplish when we want to, when we put our minds to it. driving across the globe gate bridge at john, i reminded it was built at the height of the great depression and so many feared that our best days were behind us. what i've seen and heard and learned traveling across the country as a senator from massachusetts has prepared me more for my travels to other countries an
to experience the gift of traveling along the banks of the mighty mississippi through iowa and south dakota and rivers where lewis and clark march enmeshed with the dream of our first secretary of state, thomas jefferson that would advance into the last to experience a journey that took me to alabama where he stood silently for a much talked to king appreciative stream and tipped my fingers into the top of birmingham where water flows over the name of those murdered steve bullock that are just...
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Jan 14, 2013
01/13
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and when state was mississippi. once brady was implemented and folks going to buy new guns in mississippi had to pass a criminal background check and generate paperwork, they then had, there was no competitive advantage of going to mississippi any longer. so the number of guns that were being recovered from that dwindle down from 20% to 3% after the implementation of that law. so there's a reason to believe that if you were able to launch an attack on illegal firearms markets trying to identify gun traffickers and apprehend, prosecute him, they could shut down supply lines to criminals. unfortunately, one of this, many reasons why the recent has been fully tested, but it would be limited given the current struggle that atf faces. so pete and i have made six policy recommendations that we think could improve the situation if we were ever going to get serious about doing a gun market disruption strategy and shutting down illegal gun trafficking enterprises. the first, as mentioned many times today, it's requiring the
and when state was mississippi. once brady was implemented and folks going to buy new guns in mississippi had to pass a criminal background check and generate paperwork, they then had, there was no competitive advantage of going to mississippi any longer. so the number of guns that were being recovered from that dwindle down from 20% to 3% after the implementation of that law. so there's a reason to believe that if you were able to launch an attack on illegal firearms markets trying to identify...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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are in the majority, they had, if i'm not mistaken, white root out democrats from arkansas, alabama, mississippi, louisiana, north carolina and virginia. they're gone. democrats are changed. it's an essay question that there's a gulf between the two parties. democrats are far more uniform to the pool party and when you were the majority party. cert when you came came to the house and even most recently. so was that on one side change? >> no mark, it is a novel insight, but i look to the roster of ways and means when i entered in the next two years. i did that yesterday. and there's been a change in the composition with the democrats and republicans. and i regret what's happened. i think redistrict teen has really very much diminished competition. in the 90s, i was in a marginals he then had four contested elections. a few of us were talking yesterday about some of the ads they ran in this contested election. they were difficult. i think we need more of them. but let me be very clear about what my feeling is. there have been some change in the democratic ranks, but compared to the republican rank
are in the majority, they had, if i'm not mistaken, white root out democrats from arkansas, alabama, mississippi, louisiana, north carolina and virginia. they're gone. democrats are changed. it's an essay question that there's a gulf between the two parties. democrats are far more uniform to the pool party and when you were the majority party. cert when you came came to the house and even most recently. so was that on one side change? >> no mark, it is a novel insight, but i look to the...
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Jan 2, 2013
01/13
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i visited several towns along the mississippi back then including quincy, illinois. then-senator barack obama and i came to quincy and pitched in filling sandbags with thousands of other volunteers. we worked through father's day to help mitigate the on coming flood, but it still came and there was serious damage. just like the people in new york and new jersey, these people did everything they could before and after and during the storm to save their homes, businesses and lives of their loved ones, but the magnitude of our 2008 storm was too big for local and state governments to handle. the magnitude of the flood, just like hurricane sandy, required action from congress and the federal government. we passed a supplemental appropriations bill for illinois and the midwest in 2008. that aid was essential to helping in our state the victims of that flood. i've served in congress for over 20 years and every time -- every time -- some section of our nation has been victimized by a disaster, we've come together as an american family to help those who are in need. we draw
i visited several towns along the mississippi back then including quincy, illinois. then-senator barack obama and i came to quincy and pitched in filling sandbags with thousands of other volunteers. we worked through father's day to help mitigate the on coming flood, but it still came and there was serious damage. just like the people in new york and new jersey, these people did everything they could before and after and during the storm to save their homes, businesses and lives of their loved...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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we are more -- it's a federal legislation that covers alabama, mississippi, southern illinois. so willing to good to three in the clip. so we're there. but that said -- the clip does change. the assault clip changes the type of gun. it dramatically changes it. two, i do think a comprehensive background check that deals with criminal activity would be essential to closing the loophole. the seller pieces you can. i think he has to direct the attorney general as a measure of each u.s. attorney, what they're doing on gun prosecutions. we have a u.s. attorney position here in the city of chicago that opened up. our gun prosecutions in the city, compared to other utah attorneys, lags other ones. there should be a standard and they should be measured and have to report, and that is within the executive authority because you have gun laws that sit on the books and do not get prosecuted, while we're adding other ones. i think they should hold the u.s. attorneys to a standard. that something the president can do. >> here's the kind of passion on each side of the debate. let me just do so
we are more -- it's a federal legislation that covers alabama, mississippi, southern illinois. so willing to good to three in the clip. so we're there. but that said -- the clip does change. the assault clip changes the type of gun. it dramatically changes it. two, i do think a comprehensive background check that deals with criminal activity would be essential to closing the loophole. the seller pieces you can. i think he has to direct the attorney general as a measure of each u.s. attorney,...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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in arizona, in colorado, in louisiana, florida, minnesota, mississippi, new york, utah and wisconsin, north, south, east and west. and of the $180 million the house approved for sandy-related emergency watershed protection relief, only $30 million has been requested, yet the house bill is saying that other communities cannot have access to these funds to protect their own people. it's senselessly wasteful to leave these other communities behind to suffer the effects of less recent disasters, whether they faced wildfire, hurricane or flood. mr. president, i'm not being an alarmist. coloradans unfortunately have already experienced some of these effects. for example, the usually clear and crystal clear puta river has been flowing black, literally flowing black due to ash and runoff from the fires. this forced the downstream city of fort collins to shut off their water intake for over 100 days. i know senator bennet was on site just a week ago, and the pictures were tragic and they compel action. further downstream on that important water course, the pu. uter, the city of greeley shut of
in arizona, in colorado, in louisiana, florida, minnesota, mississippi, new york, utah and wisconsin, north, south, east and west. and of the $180 million the house approved for sandy-related emergency watershed protection relief, only $30 million has been requested, yet the house bill is saying that other communities cannot have access to these funds to protect their own people. it's senselessly wasteful to leave these other communities behind to suffer the effects of less recent disasters,...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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when the democrats were the majority, they had blue dog democrats from south carolina and mississippi and louisiana and north carolina and virginia. they are gone. the democrats have changed. the democrats are far more uniformly liberal is a party than they were when you were the majority party, certainly when it came to the house. even most recently. is it all one side that changes? >> no, i looked over the ways and means when i entered in the next two years. i did that yesterday. that will give us a change in both democrats and republicans. i regret what has happened. i think that redistricting has very much diminished competition. in the '90s i was in a marginal seat and had four contested elections. we were talking yesterday about some of the advertisements that we ran in those contested elections. i think we need more of them. let me be very clear about what my feeling is. there has been some change in the democratic ranks. compared to the republican ranks, i think there has been considerably less change. i regret that there aren't more food also than our brains. but i think the
when the democrats were the majority, they had blue dog democrats from south carolina and mississippi and louisiana and north carolina and virginia. they are gone. the democrats have changed. the democrats are far more uniformly liberal is a party than they were when you were the majority party, certainly when it came to the house. even most recently. is it all one side that changes? >> no, i looked over the ways and means when i entered in the next two years. i did that yesterday. that...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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majority, they had, if i'm not mistaken, white blue dog democrats from arkansas, alabama, south carolina, mississippi, louisiana, north carolina and virginia. they're gone. the democrats have changed. i mean, isn't this a question that there's a gulf between the two parties? the democrats are far more uniformly liberal party than they were when you were the majority party, certainly when you came to the house and even most recently. so is it all one side, the change? >> no, mark, it isn't all one side. but, you know, i looked over the roster of ways and means when i entered in the next two years, i did that yesterday. and there's been a change in the composition both of democrats and republicans. and i regret what's happened. i think redistricting has really very much diminished competition. in the '90s i was in a marginal seat and had four contested elections. a few of us were talking yesterday about some of the ads that we ran in those contested elections. they were difficult. i think we need more of them. but, mark, let me be very clear about what my feeling is. there has been some change in the r
majority, they had, if i'm not mistaken, white blue dog democrats from arkansas, alabama, south carolina, mississippi, louisiana, north carolina and virginia. they're gone. the democrats have changed. i mean, isn't this a question that there's a gulf between the two parties? the democrats are far more uniformly liberal party than they were when you were the majority party, certainly when you came to the house and even most recently. so is it all one side, the change? >> no, mark, it isn't...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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to experience the gift of traveling along the banks of the mighty mississippi through iowa and south dakota and along the river where lewis and clark marked and measured the dream of our first secretary of state, thomas jefferson, who saw an america that would advance to the west. to experience a journey that took know alabama, where i stood silentfully the very pull pretty for which dr. king preached his dream and dipped my fingers to the fountain of birmingham where water flows over the names of those murdered, trying to vote or just registering to vote. to see the water trickle over the words of drmplet's king's prayer that justice might roll down like a mighty stream. i drove across the hoover dam and i wondered as i did at what america can accomplish when we want to. when we put our minds to it. driving across the golden gate bridge at dawn and reminded it was built at the height of the great depression when so many feared the best days were behind us. but i have seen and heard and learned that traveling across our country is as a senator from massachusetts has repaired me for -
to experience the gift of traveling along the banks of the mighty mississippi through iowa and south dakota and along the river where lewis and clark marked and measured the dream of our first secretary of state, thomas jefferson, who saw an america that would advance to the west. to experience a journey that took know alabama, where i stood silentfully the very pull pretty for which dr. king preached his dream and dipped my fingers to the fountain of birmingham where water flows over the names...
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126
Jan 10, 2013
01/13
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and yet of course waterways like the mississippi river flood banks of the colorado river about interconnected. they flow through multiple states. how do you think about the nexus between the locals and the inner connectivity with the broader watershed? i'm going to get you to respond as well. if things are local, the problems are local, how do you connect them? your thoughts as you work on water. >> to having to stand? >> yes, please. in the first all, i think you mentioned questions in that it got a lot of applause for your remarks at the beginning. [applause] >> i'm used to being in this position and it is one of the most difficult when there are downstream and packs with the upstream property owners are collaborators have to sacrifice in some way or collaborate for the benefit i removed from that deathly to finger-pointing. one of the most important principles, with a on regulatory consensus builder or a regulatory enforcement official is still the cited the need for local stakeholders to be bought and am committed to the solution and that the way you can act, whether it tnd l. or other ju
and yet of course waterways like the mississippi river flood banks of the colorado river about interconnected. they flow through multiple states. how do you think about the nexus between the locals and the inner connectivity with the broader watershed? i'm going to get you to respond as well. if things are local, the problems are local, how do you connect them? your thoughts as you work on water. >> to having to stand? >> yes, please. in the first all, i think you mentioned...
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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stuff from out of mississippi and other places. it was happening right there in georgia. we were at the courthouse that night, standing -- because they war counting the paper ballots and we were watching them count the ballots, and out of the back room the gator walked past us and spoke. then he realized after walking a few feet away he had just spoken to sheryl sherrod. he was angry because we had been having meetings and my father kept saying do not put another johnson in office. so he walked a few feet away and came back and said, i take that back. i didn't know who you were. and so he is standing there, with a gun on his side, and my husband is standing there, and they are staring each other -- just staring at each other, and i was about to have a heart attack, because i knew, even with all of those people in the room, that gator was just mean enough to pull his gun out with everyone there to shoot. but someone ran outside and got his son, the one would was running for office, and then he ran in there and grabbed his daddy by the arm and said, come on, just leave that
stuff from out of mississippi and other places. it was happening right there in georgia. we were at the courthouse that night, standing -- because they war counting the paper ballots and we were watching them count the ballots, and out of the back room the gator walked past us and spoke. then he realized after walking a few feet away he had just spoken to sheryl sherrod. he was angry because we had been having meetings and my father kept saying do not put another johnson in office. so he walked...
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109
Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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stuff from out of mississippi and other places. it was happening right there in georgia. we were at the courthouse that night, standing -- because they war counting the paper ballots and we were watching them count the ballots, and out of the back room the gator walked past us and spoke. then he realized after walking a few feet away he had just spoken to sheryl sherrod. he was angry because we had been having meetings and my father kept saying do not put another johnson in office. so he walked a few feet away and came back and said, i take that back. i didn't know who you were. and so he is standing there, with a gun on his side, and my husband is standing there, and they are staring each other -- just staring at each other, and i was about to have a heart attack, because i knew, even with all of those people in the room, that gator was just mean enough to pull his gun out with everyone there to shoot. but someone ran outside and got his son, the one would was running for office, and then he ran in there and grabbed his daddy by the arm and said, come on, just leave that
stuff from out of mississippi and other places. it was happening right there in georgia. we were at the courthouse that night, standing -- because they war counting the paper ballots and we were watching them count the ballots, and out of the back room the gator walked past us and spoke. then he realized after walking a few feet away he had just spoken to sheryl sherrod. he was angry because we had been having meetings and my father kept saying do not put another johnson in office. so he walked...
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Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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eye 64
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. >> and the state which was mississippi, and took almost a year, and we are implementing in a white 2014. and full implementation. states are coming non and it is like 8 per year estimated. it will take awhile for states to come on board but we're back on track. >> there are two and other systems that have been available. and many states agreed to increase the efficiency of their processes, one case where they were required to hire more full-time personnel and real id saved the state money because they were able to process drivers license applications more efficiently and quickly. >> we will open up the questions. i ask that you wait for the microphone to come around for those of our viewers on line. and state your name and who you are. no one? okay. >> the coalition of driver's licenses, regarding the branding discussion of the specifics of the law, not withstanding your courage in being the first state out there, hope you realize how difficult it is to be the first of the states to take on a difficult task, regarding the law, you pointed out before, it seems inconsistent the agenc
. >> and the state which was mississippi, and took almost a year, and we are implementing in a white 2014. and full implementation. states are coming non and it is like 8 per year estimated. it will take awhile for states to come on board but we're back on track. >> there are two and other systems that have been available. and many states agreed to increase the efficiency of their processes, one case where they were required to hire more full-time personnel and real id saved the...
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Jan 22, 2013
01/13
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it's a federal legislation that covers alabama, mississippi, southern illinois, all parts. so if ten is not magical, i'm willing to go to three as a cliff. so we're there. [laughter] but that said -- because the assault clip changes the type of gun. it dramatically changes it. two, i do think of comprehensive background checks that deal with criminal activity would be essential to anything closing on that loophole. obviously, the seller pieces you can do. i do think usually people think about executive order, something the president would seen, i think he has to direct the attorney general as a measure of each attorney what they're doing on gun prosecutions. we have a u.s. attorney position here in the city of chicago. it's opened up. our gun prosecutions as a city compared to, you compare it to others, kind of u.s. attorneys' positions, lags other ones. there should be a standard, and they should be measured and have to report. and can that is within the executive authority because you have gun laws that sit on the books and do not get prosecuted. so i would put the prosec
it's a federal legislation that covers alabama, mississippi, southern illinois, all parts. so if ten is not magical, i'm willing to go to three as a cliff. so we're there. [laughter] but that said -- because the assault clip changes the type of gun. it dramatically changes it. two, i do think of comprehensive background checks that deal with criminal activity would be essential to anything closing on that loophole. obviously, the seller pieces you can do. i do think usually people think about...
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Jan 3, 2013
01/13
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and is the chairman of the board here at the haight-ashbury clinic and terence hallinan organized in mississippi freedom writers on cole street. i would come home at night and was the university of the haight-ashbury. i had never heard anything like that and i was the first time i got the idea of segregated health care in the south. and we would go over to their office at 81980 and everything since hallinan in that mix was also eddie brown. so that's another thing about your book as there is this group of lawyers -- would testify in court cases for tony sir. nic was tony with tommy stories. he was this incredible storyteller. he was not good at finance. his idea he was driver car coming to so many tickets you want the police take it away. he never paid any bills. >> i just want to say when david called me up to be interviewed about the book, i said god, can we even remember that time. and it was a really weird moment in the sun and hunter thompson was night manager at the theater and i have lived with already mitchell and jim mitchell and david talbot k. mastiff he could follow us. i was actuall
and is the chairman of the board here at the haight-ashbury clinic and terence hallinan organized in mississippi freedom writers on cole street. i would come home at night and was the university of the haight-ashbury. i had never heard anything like that and i was the first time i got the idea of segregated health care in the south. and we would go over to their office at 81980 and everything since hallinan in that mix was also eddie brown. so that's another thing about your book as there is...